Thursday, June 29, 2006

Response

Okay, I've heard your cries for relief, so I'll blog today.

Tamara asked if there were any fun stories or warm fuzzies, and there are. For instance, two nights ago Blondie left the water running, and Boaz wanted to talk to her about it. He asked her if she knew where the water came from before it got in the house. She said it came from the lake and he said no. Then she said it came from the well, and he told her that was right. Then he asked her if she knew what a well was....can you guess what she said....she said it was a big fish. HAHAHA Okay, that stopped us all for a while. Both my little ones tend to pronounce things like tail as "tell" and whale as "well". Boaz probed a bit more and Blondie told him she thought that the water came from a whale in the ocean, very far away, and the water we get comes from his spout. That's so funny I can barely type it.

We proceeded to teach her what a well really is.

As for warm fuzzies, I really experienced a good one a couple of days ago. I finally sat down and created my control journal, ala flylady.net, and the first thing on the list every day is bible study. I showed this journal to Boaz, and he loved that we were all doing bible study together every morning. I corrected him and told him no, that only referred to ME doing MY bible study. He felt that it should be all of us. I raised my eyebrows but agreed to it. The warm fuzzy came the next day as I sat at the kitchen table with my three daughters (my son is away at camp this week). As we all opened our bibles and began to quietly read, I was struck by how sweet it was. What a wonderful way to start our morning! My husband makes a lot more sense than I think he does...

What's on my mind...I've been reading a blog of a woman who has two children and is about to adopt two more. It's the most similar to my own situation of any I've found, so I'm intensely interested. One of the things she brought up was attachment disorders, which I've heard of. However, she obviously has read some things or heard some things I haven't, because she mentioned not hugging the little girl back when the girl gave her a hug. I was confused and thought that sounded a bit cold. But then I gave it more thought. My little ones have been giving me hugs and saying "I love you" since the very first day. I've been doing the same thing. But in doing so, have I confused them? Do they really have any idea what love truly is? Bubbles says every day, many times a day, "I love you Mommy" to which I reply "I love you too Sweetheart" to which she replies "I love you more!" and I reply "I don't know about that." It's a game, said in a sing-song voice, always the same way. If I answer anything different than usual, I can tell it bothers her. It's comforting to her that I always reply the same way. But since I've been thinking about it, I've realized that she never just comes up for a hug and seriously says, "I love you."

I think I'm finally getting to the meat of what disturbs me. My two little ones show affection, but that is all it is, a show. There isn't any warmth to it. They are mimicking what they see. If one of them comes to me for a hug, and the other one sees it, they are right there making sure they get one too. It's a competition for attention, but not for love. I mean, I know that love is what they truly want but they don't even know what they are trying to get, because they are so young and they've never experienced true love before. Can anyone follow what I'm trying to say? My relationships with them feel empty. I'm teaching them grammar and pronunciation and math and manners and respect...but am I teaching them love? If I am it is just through my daily living, and it isn't something purposeful. I mean I'm showing them affection and telling them I love them, but am I missing something or leaving something out? Should I be doing something different? Or do I just need to be patient and realize that it will all take time? I don't know.

I do think that with Bucky gone this week, it has given Babygirl a better change to bond with Blondie and Bubbles. Normally the little ones spend most of their time playing with Bucky. He's closer to their age and enjoys playing video games with them. I got a nice warm fuzzy Tuesday night while I heard Babygirl showing the girls how to give a "sister kiss" which was to press their cheeks together and go "mwah" (insert kiss sound here). Then she picked up one on her back and one on her front, and that was so cute I had to take a picture.

She really has spent more quality time with them this week. I hate when one of my children is gone, but it also allows some bonding time with the members of the family that are still at home.
You could also say a prayer for our finances. We currently have two empty rent houses and another that we just had to evict today. I hope God sends some paying tenants soon.

Oh, and one other warm fuzzy....Ninety-nine percent of the time Blondie and Bubbles call me Mommy, but very, very occasionally they call me Mama, and I love it. I can't explain why I like it so much, it's just more personal or warm or something.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Beautiful pic!! You know, Bug went through a phase where she was all about the I love you's. Now she says it more selectively and I think maybe I like that more. It seems to me that now she means it.

Gawdessness said...

I am thinking it just takes time and there are moments when it works and it feels right but I just know so little, in some ways, about these kids that I am adopting and I can over think things. Also have to admit that my Social Worker is a big one for talking about watching for signs of attachment disorder and that affects my thinking and jacks up my fears.

I want to hug and kiss these kids a lot, and it kills me to hold back, but it is a really weird time for them and us...it's hard.

It's also tough for me because it is so weird to try and attach to two new people this way. But you know what I mean, I think. I love the picture by the way. We are trying to take it one day at a time but I am so tired.

Great and thoughtful post!
Thanks!

No Longer In Crisis said...

I'm so glad you posted - and the picture is so beautiful - it's one I would frame! We took a class in contuning ed - I'm going to have to blog about it, but I will never do it justice - on "The Culture of Poverty". It emphasied that poverty has less to do with no money and more to do with no resources or knowledge and relationships to access resources. Well, one of the big ones was kids in foster care to focus a lot on penance and forgiveness rather than behavior change when it came to punishment (since in the culture of poverty behavior change is so foreign and is seen as "useless"). They also talked about the focus on "entertainment", and how kids will laugh when punished, and "act" instead of building sincerity. It made so much sense to me, and I thought a lot about the girls as I listened. The bottom line in the class is that in order to teach any kid how to get out of "the culture of poverty" they have to have strong bonded relationships and models. The whole "middle class" language and way of life has so many hidden rules - it may very well be like living in a foreign country (or adopting foreigners!). I guess I never thought about it as culture shock before. (Dunno if I word I said here made sense, but I feel you.)

It has been awesome to read Gawdessness' story - hasn't it? Unreal.

Anonymous said...

I LOVE the picture! Thanks for letting us know how things are going. Love takes time. Hang in there.

David Michael said...

Beautiful picture! The more confident they are that you are not going to abandon them, the more natural they will become. "Love knows no fear."